Romeo And Juliet Gender Roles Essay

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When studying a play like Romeo and Juliet, it is easy to assume that it factually portrays the era in which it was made. A plethora of characters in the play such as Capulet, do in fact represent people of this era. However, when researching deeper into the context of the Elizabethan times, Romeo and Juliet, to little/no extent represents Juliet as an ordinary girl living in this period. Shakespeare has crafted Juliet through characterisation (speech and action) as a character that culturally and socially defies Gender roles, marries younger than the social normality and is not looked down upon after taking her life. These all rebel against how young women were seen and represented in the Elizabethan times.
Through Characterisation, in …show more content…

Socially, in the Elizabethan times, Women were seen as the inferior sex and were expected to listen to every command that a man barked. Women in this time were also not known for questioning the morals and actions of a man. In Romeo and Juliet, to no extent does Juliet represent girls in the Elizabethan era according to the expected gender roles seen in the mid-16th century. Although other characters in the play represented women as the weaker sex (True; and therefore women, being the weaker vessels, is ever thrust to the wall---“(Act 1 Scene 1). Juliet defies this representation in her relationship with Romeo. Upon meeting Romeo at her father’s masked party, Juliet does not shy away as any other unmarried girl would do in the Elizabethan times. Instead, she interacted with Romeo in a friendly and flirtatious manner: “Then have my lips the sin that they have took” and “You kiss by the book” (Act 1, Scene 5). In the play, Juliet can be seen as a character that questions the morals and actions of Romeo and seems to have the role of making decisions in the relationship. She questions Romeo when Juliet brings up the idea of marriage first and is very straightforward with her ideas:” If that thy bent of love be honourable, / Thy purpose marriage, send me word to-morrow” (Act 2, scene 2). Plus, Juliet did not ask Romeo whether he would like to marry her, she only asked when …show more content…

In the Elizabethan era, suicide was an action that was frowned upon. If you were caught attempting suicide and failed, you would be put on trial and punished due to the fact that it was illegal in the 16th century. Furthermore, if you were successful at your attempt you would be buried outside of the city as an ‘exile’, you would have dishonoured your family and you would be considered as an “exiled soul”. In the play, after Juliet wakes up to her husband dead beside her, she decides that the only way to be with him was too commit suicide: “O happy dagger, / This is thy sheath,” (Act 5, scene 3). Shortly after other characters in the play found Romeo and Juliet, they discussed what they were going to do with Juliet’s body. Montague mentioned: “For I will raise her statue in pure gold” and “There shall no figure at such rate be

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